
“Persistent, multimodal cancer pain remains a challenge, particularly in long-term survivors facing treatment-related complications. The management of high-dose opioid dependence concurrent with chronic, multi-drug resistant (MDR) periprosthetic infection presents a critical unmet need. This case reports the potential use and sustained efficacy of medical cannabis monotherapy, highlighting an unexpected temporal association with the resolution of inflammatory and infectious symptoms in a highly complex oncologic setting.
Case presentation
A 27-year-old male, a long-term survivor of high-risk Ewing Sarcoma of the proximal tibia, presented with intractable mixed pain (VAS 9–10) secondary to chronic, recurrent MDR periprosthetic osteomyelitis and multiple surgical revisions (2013–2024). Despite continuous use of high-dose opioids (up to 120 mg/day morphine equivalents), pain levels remained moderate-to-severe (VAS 6–7) and functional status was poor. The patient had previously found temporary relief with self-administered cannabis. In January 2025, after refusing limb amputation, supervised medical cannabis therapy (Bedrocan®, 22% THC, 1% CBD, 1 g/day) was initiated. Pain levels gradually stabilized at VAS 2–3, coinciding with complete opioid discontinuation within four weeks. Over nine months of follow-up, the patient maintained full autonomy and an active lifestyle. Notably, sustained cannabis monotherapy was associated with the complete closure of the chronic draining fistula and a reduction in systemic inflammatory markers (CRP from 9.6 to 2.3 mg/dL). No significant adverse effects were reported.
Conclusions
This case suggests that THC-rich medical cannabis may represent a feasible strategy for achieving opioid-free analgesia in selected patients with refractory oncologic pain. While causality cannot be established from a single observation, the correlation between cannabis initiation and the resolution of severe chronic inflammatory and infectious symptoms is intriguing and suggests a potential pleiotropic role extending beyond traditional pain management. While these findings align with emerging evidence highlighting the potent immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory properties of cannabinoids, they contrast with some recent neutral meta-analyses in broader populations, an this would justify warrant urgent controlled investigation into the potential mechanisms of cannabinoids in complex inflammatory pain states and their role as a possible adjunct in managing long-term oncological complications.”
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41572388
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s42238-026-00388-x